4,834 research outputs found
An Academic Visit to the Modern Law Firm: Considering A Theory of Promotion-Driven Growth
A Review of Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm by Marc Galanter and Thomas Pala
The Study of Law and India’s Society: The Galanter Factor
Moog pursues three related themes or lines of inquiry that have marked her own research, the roots of which are to be found in Marc Galanter\u27s earlier works and the broader law-and-society movement. These include, the significance of lower courts, the role of the local bar, and the evolution of alternatives to formal court proceedings all represent essential areas for exploration in the attempt to understand the successes and failures of the Indian justice system
An Appreciation of Marc Galanter’s Scholarship
Lande highlights three of Marc Galanter\u27s works to illustrate qualities that seem especially worth emulating. He includes extended excerpts of his writing because his concepts and language are so evoctive that paraphrasing often does not do them justice. Galanter\u27s works that Lande focuses, include the classic articles, Why the Haves Come Out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change ; and Case Congregations and Their Careers . The professor\u27s recent book, Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes and Legal Culture, is also featured. The book is the culmination of much of his work on American law
Practice Style and Successful Legal Mobilization
Bloom talks about the making of a great cause lawyer. Perhaps not surprisingly, dedication, strong political ties, and superb legal skills all play a role in the making of a great cause lawyer, but so does a somewhat less obvious quality, which Marc Galanter described several years ago as practice style. However, in these case studies, it suggests that the making of a great cause lawyer depends, in part, on practice style. Put differently, how a lawyer approaches legal practice seems to matter for purposes of legal mobilization. In these cases, cause lawyers were more effective at using the law to advance a political agenda when they adopted a more flexible practice style that may more closely resemble that of an ordinary lawyer
Worlds in a Small Room
In the lead article of this symposium, Marc Galanter points out that steeply declining trial rates hold true across a variety of trial genres, including state and federal courts, criminal and civil matters, and even federal administrative agencies\u27 own trial equivalents. This brief essay will explore a new setting in which to examine Galanter\u27s thesis
The Decline of Trials in a Legalizing Society
Outcomes determined by trials have been a steadily declining portion of case dispositions in American courts for more than half a century; and for the past quarter century, trials in those courts have been declining in absolute numbers. Although there are differences in detail, the trend line is clear—the trial is declining as the thing—indeed the central, defining, characteristic thing that our courts do. The departure of trials is mourned by some judges, practitioners, and academics but is celebrated by others. The rarity of trials remains hidden from many by their robust media presence. This Article juxtaposes the decline of trials to changes in the role and shape of law in American society and to the continuing increase of laws, regulations, lawyers, and litigation
When Do Facts Persuade? Some Thoughts on the Market for “Empirical Legal Studies”
Chambliss talks about how Marc Galanter has devoted himself to combating the jaundiced view of the civil-justice system. Armed initially with great faith in the power of social science, Galanter and other socio-legal scholars of his generation, as well as many who have followed, have tried to combat misinformation in law and policy with the findings from systematic research--as if the facts would speak for themselves
Afterword
Galanter expresses his appreciation to the wide-ranging collection of articles that flatteringly claim to be inspired or influenced by his work. He determines that apart from a few side trips to the UK and to Israel, all of his works have been clustered in two regions widely separated in both space and culture: predominantly India at first, then predominantly the US, and a mix of both
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